Xi. frequently asked questions related to recipes – ETA Duplica Vital User Manual

Page 66

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XI. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS RELATED TO RECIPES

Problem

Cause

Solution

Bread rises too quickly.

- Too much yeast, too much flour, lack of salt

a/b

- Or combination of these causes

a/b

Bread did not rise at all

- No or a few of yeast only

a/b

or partially only

- Old or expired yeast

e

- Too hot liquid

c

- Yeast in contact with liquid

d

- Improper floor type or expired floor

e

- Too much or no liquid

a/b/g

- Low sugar

a/b

Bread rises extremely and

- If water is soft, yeast ferments more intensively

f/k

spills over the baking pan.

- Too much milk will influence fermentation of yeast

c

Crumb collapses, there is

- Dough volume exceeds the pan and the bread

a hollow in the bread after

lowers.

a/f

baking.

- Too much liquid.

a/b/h

- Too short or long fermentation due to increased

water temperature or baking space or excessive

moisture level

c/h/i

- Too much yeast.

k

Heavy and clumpy bread

- Too much or no flour

a/b/g

structure

- Low yeast or sugar

a/b

- Too much of fruits, coarsely-ground floor or one

of the other ingredients

b

- Old or expired flour

e

Bread crumb not baked

- Too much or no liquid

a/b/g

- High air humidity

h

- Recipe contains wet ingredients

g

Open or coarse bread

- Too much water

g

structure or too much hollows - No salt

b

- High moisture, too hot water

h/i

Bread is not baked properly

- Too much volume for the baking pan

a/f

inside and outside

- Excessive amount of flour, particularly for white bread f

- Too much yeast and low salt

a/b

- Too much sugar

a/b

- Sweet ingredients in addition to sugar

b

Uneven or clumpy slices

- Bread not cooled down sufficiently (steam did

not escape)

j

Flour deposits on the crust

- Flour not processed well during kneading on sides

g

66

GB

/ 210

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